To a degree, the overall structure of the narrative was suggested by the late Henryk Górecki’s Symphony No. 3, Op. 36 (Symfonia pies´ni z˙ałosnych, 1976), as conducted by David Zinman. Too, the influence of Neil Jordan and Danielle Dax, via The Company of Wolves (1984), should be fairly obvious, though I somehow was unaware of it until I’d finished the book. And the same can be said for another very obvious inspiration, Tim Buckley’s “Song to the Siren” (1970, as reinterpreted by This Mortal Coil and Elizabeth Fraser on It’ll End in Tears, [1984]).
I have many people to thank (names will be repeated), because without them, this novel genuinely would never have been written. First and foremost, Sonya Taaffe (above and beyond; and for granting me permission to use her “The Magdalene of Gévaudan”) and Geoffrey H. Goodwin, who sat up with me on several occasions, long past midnight and almost until dawn, discussing where Imp’s story might and might not be. I owe an especially great debt to a number of writers who, during a late-night, dawn-thirty impromptu “workshop” at ReaderCon 21, urged me on and provided many ideas that would become crucial to the shifting shape of the novel: Michael Cisco, Greer Gilman, Gemma Files, Erik Amundsen, and, again, Geoffrey H. Goodwin and Sonya Taaffe. My thanks to Peter Straub, for his brilliance and support, and to my agent, Merrilee Heifetz (Writers House), and editor, Anne Sowards, for their patience as I missed deadline after deadline, and still asked for more time. To Michele Alpern, who has restored my faith in copy editors. To my mother, Susan Ramey Cleveland, to Jeff VanderMeer, and everyone who loved The Red Tree. My thanks to Hilary Cerullo, MD, who calmed my mind so I could finally write again, and to Kristin Hersh—the Rat Girl—for showing me it was okay to write like I think. My gratitude to the staff of the Providence Athenaeum, the Harvard Museum of Natural History and the President and Fellows of Harvard College, the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, S. T. Joshi, Andrew Fuller, Andrew Migliore and the organizers of the 2010 H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival (Portland, OR), and to everyone in Boston, New York City, and Providence who has offered support, but are too numerous to name. Also, thanks to Elizabeth Bear, Holly Black, Dan Chaon, Brian Evanson, Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Hand, Kathe Koja, Bradford Morrow, Benjamin Percy, Peter Straub, Cathrynne M. Valente, and Jeff VanderMeer, who all read the book while it was still only a manuscript, and to Jacob Garbe and Casondra Brewster for words in perfect order, and to Melissa Bowman for a perfect analogy. And to Radiohead and Philip Ridley for letting me quote their songs. To Vince Locke for the illustrations that appear in this edition of the novel. My gratitude to Kyle Cassidy, for his vision, and to everyone else who helped us turn the book into photos and a Lilliputian film (Brian, Sarah, Dani, and Nicola). Again, all my love to Michael Zulli, who became my Saltonstall, and brought the man and his paintings into this world, with a sprig of nightshade and black serpentine. But, above all, thanks to my partner, Kathryn A. Pollnac, for putting up with my shit, and reading these words back to me again, and again, and again.
We’re doing the impossible, and this makes us mighty.
AUTHOR’S BIOGRAPHY
Caitlín R. Kiernan is the author of nine novels, including Daughter of Hounds, The Red Tree, and The Drowning Girl: A Memoir. Her award-winning short fiction has been collected in several volumes, including Tales of Pain and Wonder; To Charles Fort, with Love; Alabaster; The Ammonite Violin & Others; A is for Alien; and the forthcoming Confessions of a Five-Chambered Heart. Two volumes of her erotica have been published, Frog Toes and Tentacles and Tales from the Woeful Platypus. In 2011, Subterranean Press published Two Worlds and In Between: The Best of Caitlín R. Kiernan (Volume One). Volume Two will follow in 2014. She is a four-time nominee for the World Fantasy Award, a two-time nominee for the Shirley Jackson Award, and has been recognized by the James Tiptree, Jr. Award. Trained as a vertebrate paleontologist, she currently lives in Providence, Rhode Island. She’s heard many sirens, and spoken with many WOLVES.
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